I'm a two fingers and a thumb typist. I took typing classes in high school and again while I was working for an insurance company. Those lessons were as futile as the piano lessons I took as a kid. Absolutely wretched typist, my wife can't stand to watch but those skills never got in the way of success as a computer programmer/analyst or as an instructor for over 20 years.

Some of us can relate a letter, word or phrase to automatic finger movements and others just can't make that mental link.

I'm a two-finger typist - both index fingers. I had figured out how to use our old Royal portable typewriter when I was about 12, and that was with one finger from each hand. By the time my dad sent me to a summer typing class one year, I was faster with the two fingers than trying to do it the "right" way, so whenever no one was watching me, I did what I had always done. I can remember in the Air Force that people would walk by the door of my office and see me typing, then come back and look again. As I recall, I once did a standardized timed typing test and hit between 65-70 wpm with my method. Far too late now to change anything....

A friend of my father was able to type when he was drafted in 1943, he was made a clerk and given three stripes out of boot camp. Because of that, my father insisted that I take typing in high school. I could never type more than 24 mistakes a minute until I started using a computer in the mid 80s. Learning how to type was a great benefit to me, even though it was not something that father had expected. It is easy to back space to correct a mistake, and now I can type around 50 words a minute. Best Gus

I took typing in JC but bailed when I realized my GPA was going to suffer... besides who types fj,fj all day? I learned the two finger method when computers came along... except for the DEC,HP ABC keyboards, I became very proficient in a hurry!

I took typing in JC but bailed when I realized my GPA was going to suffer... besides who types fj,fj all day? I learned the two finger method when computers came along... except for the DEC,HP ABC keyboards, I became very proficient in a hurry!

I took typing in high school as I was left handed and no one could read my rittin. Also it was a small school in a farming community and it was that or a FFA course. A few years ago an injury to my left forearm severed several tendons so now typing is with one finger on left and five on right.

I type with most of my fingers, even though I do hunt & pick. I have pretty much learned where to hunt. I think it will probably be called "type" forever, or is there already a new word for it? Are we texting? I suppose we are texting on the computer keyboard!?

I never used a keyboard till we got a computer so learning to type was hard cause the letters are all mixed up. I would say it would be easy if they just put them in order. Now when I try to type a new contact into my cell phone's phone book, I can't find the letters cause they are in order.

I don't know how many fingers I use cause I never counted, it would mess up my typing. At least my fingers now spell better than I do.

I took typing in HS as an elective and aced it. There were three guys in that class of about 35. We took a little ribbing but it paid off for me in college and my entire computer and business career. I've slowed down somewhat but I can still type without looking.

I took typing in high school with visions of it being advantageous in college. The teacher promised not to flunk me if I promised not to come back. I got a D which was better than I deserved. That malicious witch put adhesive tape over the keys which totally destroyed my chances, I just couldn't memorize where the keys were and which finger gave me which letter. However, some familiarity with the keyboard made it easier to deal with the keypunch machines when I started programming. With sufficient practice my speed got pretty fair for two fingers and a thumb. I also found that I was proofreading as I typed - for correct spelling, language syntax and logic so being a little slow with the fingers wasn't as bad as it seemed.

I enjoyed reading this, so I guess I 'll share mine. I also took Typing in high school. I got clear up to a rip, roaring twenty three words a minute. I was not the slowest in class, there was one kid that could only do nineteen. (My oldest son took a "keyboarding" test and broke his schools record at 86 wpm) My hands are size XL with medium length fingers. Too much hard physical work has been tough on the digits. Getting stiffer with age, I am down to both thumbs and only about two fingers on each hand that will bend fast enough to do typing. I won't complain, given some of the work I have done (underground construction, trenching, drilling). I have my share of scars, but I still have all ten and they all work. Drive carefully, and enjoy, W2

Back when I was in school the only ones that took typing was some one that was going to college and I sure was not college material. I would of never dreamed that I would ever use one of these things instead of a phone. I am up to two fingers now !!!

I use middle finger of each hand and sometimes add the ring finger and index finger if I get lazy. The thumbs are relegated to the space bar and the pinky is the little guy that does nothing because it went home!

I never took a tying class but spend a lot of time on the puter writing papers, reports, and making a fool of myself.

Like so many in the above post, I also took "Typing" in high school. I have had a typewriter somewhere near me ever since that first typing class. I do not like writing anything with a pencil. My typewriter went from a manual to an electric to my current laptop. I still occasionally type something on the electric typewriter just a little slower pace than those old days.

I took typing in Jr. High. There were a lot of good looking girls in that class. I had no idea how I would use typing until the computer came along. Only problem I have is that I am so ambidextrous that I get my two hands mixed up. Especially between the E and the I. Both those letters are typed with the middle finger. Ambidextrous works very well when working on the car. I can use whichever hand works best for the situation. Bolts like the crankcase to block bolts work well using both hands.

I took typing in high school back in the '50's. I do use all my fingers, I think, pretty much correctly as I can type without looking at the keyboard. I am not too fast, but I think I do type pretty much correctly. If I have deviated any from how I was taught, well, I guess that I've been doing it so long that right or wrong, I do use all my fingers without looking and it works for me.

The only thing I ever insisted on when my four sons (now all in their 40's) went to high school was that they take typing. They never say much about it, but I have watched them type and all four of them do use all their fingers, and they also type much faster than I do. But then that's kids for ya', right?

I type with both hands but left side of the key board sticks and sometimes I type 2 letters at the same time with ether hand! In HS I got a D or C in typing, in my first year in Community Collage I got an A, go figure. Still faster and more readable then my hand writing.

My wife's a one-finger pounder, I can type "normally" like there's no tomorrow (thanks to a good high school typing teacher), and like Joe Bell, not college material either, think I took it to be with all the babes!! anyway, now I gotta re-learn typing with my two thumbs!! Oh to be young again! NOT!!

I had the choice of taking typing or auto mechanics when I was a high school senior. I opted for auto mechanics. If I would have taken typing would have been in class with my girl friend. But auto mechanics as still a better draw. That winter the shop teacher asked me to help him do a "frame off" on a '25 Dodge Bros. That was the first chance to work on old cars. That shop teacher restored a number of old cars. The '25 DB, '26 T, and a 31 A are in my garage. Oh, I forgot the girl friend in that typing class is my wife of 45 years. Her father was the shop teacher I helped with that '25 DB.

My typing skills have suffered from not taking typing, but the old car experience and my wife were worth it. Regards, Pletch